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Boards of directors are sitting ducks. Shareholders complain and even attack, management manipulates, and individual board members have little power, able to act only as part of the board as a whole. Governance issues are front and center, yet there is often little understanding, even among board members, of the key role that they play.
Written in an accessible and human voice, The Governance Revolution: What Every Board Member Needs to Know, NOW! provides information and context essential to anyone seeking to understand how corporations and their stewards-the board of directors-can and should function in the volatile world we inhabit.
Deborah Hicks Midanek offers useful insight into what board members of corporations actually do, the current standards for board members and why they exist. She includes a timely discussion of how clarity of purpose can improve board and director effectiveness. Informed by her long experience serving public, private, and family owned corporate boards as well as those of charitable, and government organizations, she provides essential context regarding the evolution of board practice as well as candid discussion of the issues involved in the relentless effort to improve corporate governance processes. Focused mainly on the dominant public corporation, she also explores the special challenges of serving private and family owned as well as nonprofit and public agency boards.
Written by a seasoned board member, and liberally laced with stories and cases illustrating the tricky issues directors wrestle with, this book is the essential common-sense companion for anyone working with a board, serving on a board, or wanting to do so. Directors, aspiring directors, investors, and students of corporate behavior will benefit from this highly readable description of the cloistered boardroom.
For Roger Trapp's article in Forbes featuring a discussion of this title click here
For a Roundtable discussion in Financier Worldwide Magazine featuring Deborah Hicks Midanek please click here
https://www.financierworldwide.com/roundtable-risks-facing-directors-officers-aug18#.W1BqQdVKiUk
Click here for a review in Financial Analysts Journal
https://www.cfapubs.org/doi/abs/10.2469/br.v13.n1.10
Click here for an excerpt on Corporate Board Member:
https://boardmember.com/what-is-the-governance-revolution/
Auteur
Deborah Hicks Midanek, Principal, Prevail Investments, LLC; Vice Chairman & Independent Director, Innovate MS., USA
Contenu
Part I: The System and How It Came To Be 1
Chapter 1: How Our Governance System Began 3
The First Limited Liability Corporation 3
Amsterdam Stock Exchange Established to List VOC Securities 4
VOC Completes Initial Public Offering, Possibly World's First 4
The Governance of VOC Establishes the Model 5
The Lords Seventeen Governance Structure Drawn from Guild
System 5
VOC Confronts a Large Activist Shareholder 6
. . . And a Bear Syndicate 6
The Corporate Form Advances and SpreadsAnd with It, the Board 7
Corporations Arrived in the New World 8
And Bubbles Burst 9
Chapter 2: The Emergence of the Corporation in United States 11
New York Pioneers Simple Incorporation Procedure 11
Boston Manufacturing Company is First Private Corporation in United
States 12
Corporations Gain Power Under State Control 13
Economic Opportunity Expands; Farmers and Artisans Suffer
Disruption 14
Corporate Control is Concentrated 15
How J.D. Rockefeller Went from Rags to Riches 15
The Government Fights Back, Kind Of 16
Early Days of the New York Stock Exchange 17
Teddy Busts the Trusts 19
Government Power Takes on Commercial Power: Teddy v J.P. 19
Unintended Consequences Lead to More Antitrust Laws 20
Chapter 3: PostWorld War I Developments 23
The Stock Market Crashes 23
The Great Depression and FDR's New Deal 23
Safety Net for Banks Created 24
Regulation of Securities and Securities Markets Takes Root 25
Safety Net Extended to Citizens as Social Security is Born 25
Frustration Sets in as Unemployment Persists 26
Government and Business Mobilize for World War II 27
Roosevelt and Business Create Formidable Alliance 27
Solidarity Works Miracles 28
Wartime Success Reaches Far Beyond Battlefields 29
Chapter 4: The Glow Following World War II 31
The 1950s Board Role 31
Stock Market Investing is Patriotic Duty 32
The Nifty Fifty Catches On 33
Investor Relations Become a Corporate Function 34
Chapter 5: Shifting Dynamics from 1970 to 2000 35
Agency Theory is Born 35
The Stock Market Corrects 36
Outrage over the Wreck of Penn Central Fuels New Focus on Board
Role 36
Broad Corruption Revealed Leads to Focus on Governance Per Se 37
The Board as Overseer Takes Root as Independent Directors Become
Desirable 38
The Definition of Independence Proves Elusive; We Know It When We
See It 38 The 1980s Board Role: The Board Becomes Important **39</strong&g...